saveascream.com
Save A Scream: A Cruelty Free Vegan-Friendly Rock N' Roll Website
http://www.saveascream.com/merchandise.htm
NEW* SAVE A SCREAM MOUSE MATS. UK: £5.50 plus £1.50 p&p. Europe: £5.50 plus £4 postage. USA/Rest of the World: £5.50 plus £5 postage. These new mouse mats were printed by the lovely humans at Freshfields Animal Rescue - so funding has gone to them. Freshfields Animal Rescue help care for abandoned, abused and unwanted animals and have a centre in Wales and a centre in Liverpool. Visit www.freshfieldsrescue.org.uk. Since they print themselves, all of their profit goes back to the rescue centre. Each wrist...
razorsmile.org
Badger Trust - Sussex
http://razorsmile.org/badgertrustsussex
How you can help. Badger Trust - Sussex is a member of the Badger Trust. Badger Trust - Sussex. Registered Charity No. 1113434. Badger Hotline: 07910 198720. Badger cubs rescued by Badger Trust - Sussex. Welcome to the website of Badger Trust - Sussex, formerly the Mid Sussex Badger Protection Group (MSBPG). Through our website you can find out more about badgers, the threats they face, what we do, and how you can help. Current News - The Badger Trust - Sussex Blog. Website hosted by Badger Groups UK.
quaker-animals.co.uk
Dominic Dyer speaks to the 2015 QCA AGM | Quaker Concern For Animals
http://quaker-animals.co.uk/2015/06/dominic-dyer-speaks-to-the-2015-qca-agm
Quaker Concern For Animals. Dominic Dyer speaks to the 2015 QCA AGM. Dominic’s background working in the Ministry of Agriculture means he has a broad understanding of both farming and politics. He explained that continuing retail demand for low prices on dairy and meat products has led farmers to try to supplement incomes by selling cows, necessitating this movement. Transmission of bTB from cow to cow accounts for 95 per cent of contagion while badgers account for just five percent. While all this may a...
badgersni.org.uk
Join us
http://badgersni.org.uk/join.html
To register as a supporter of the Northern Ireland Badger Group, just complete the form below. Registration is open to anyone aged eighteen or over who shares our objectives of protecting and conserving badgers. There is no subscription fee although this is reviewed annually. We have a policy of inclusive membership and welcome supporters from all walks of life, communities and backgrounds. We do not share personal information with any other party without your express permission. I am aged 18 *.
badgersni.org.uk
Gardens
http://badgersni.org.uk/gardens.html
Badgers do not pose any greater threat to humans or pets than any other wild animal or bird, despite scaremongering claims made by the farming unions and others. Badgers and their homes (setts) are protected by law, but lawful actions can usually be taken to resolve, or at least minimise problems, without harm to badgers or other animals. There is no foolproof way to prevent badgers coming into your garden but we offer the following suggestions:. Link or electric fence to deter them.
binfieldbadgers.org.uk
Help Stop The Badger Cull - Binfield Badger Group
http://binfieldbadgers.org.uk/bTB.htm
Protecting Badgers in Berkshire. Help Stop the Badger Cull. Welcome to the Group's page on the decision by Westminster to carry out a cull of badgers, which as we know from previous culls, will not help with the problem of bovine TB in the cattle herds of the UK. Berkshire Badger vaccination initiative. Our Berkshire badgers need you! We are setting up the Berkshire Badger Vaccination initiative. But we need your help! Getting traps and equipment to the farm sites,. Fund raising for equipment. The follow...
brockwatcher.wordpress.com
Some enchanted evening | Brockwatcher's Blog
https://brockwatcher.wordpress.com/2010/05/22/some-enchanted-evening
Badgerings from a Brockwatcher. What did 11,000 badgers die for? May 22, 2010. This sett, situated near the top of a bank, has two main entrances from which a huge amount of sandy soil has been excavated over the years. This massive platform of soil created by the badgers’ labours has half buried the tree growing at the foot of the bank (see A week in the life (Part 1). How many badgers lived here, I wondered, and did they have cubs? What a contrast the next sett was! This animal soon disappeared into on...
brockwatcher.wordpress.com
Willow goes wild | Brockwatcher's Blog
https://brockwatcher.wordpress.com/2010/07/15/willow-goes-wild
Badgerings from a Brockwatcher. Brocks, a fox, and oh, deer! July 15, 2010. The badger cub in question was the second of the two Brocks who I rescued at the weekend (see One weekend, two rescues. Found on the side of a minor road on Sunday morning, he had no visible injuries but was pretty much ‘out for the count’ (as you can see from the photo on Flickr. Later that evening, while the top of the rescue cage was open during a feeding session, the little badger decided to say hello the the stuffed cub whic...
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